Photo Of The Day

by Lux on December 25, 2014 at 12:00pm

Photo: Per-Erik Jaderberg/AFP/Getty ImagesThe giant goat,before and after it was set on fire in 2004, is made of straw, weighs over 3 tons and is over forty feet tall. At this time of year, the residents of Gävle, Sweden have one big question on their minds: Will the goat burn?

GAVLE GOAT

If there is one thing you don’t want to be in Sweden during Christmas, it’s a Yule Goat

The small Swedish town of Gavle harbors a history of repeated sustained vandalism, unexpected in the polite mild-mannered Nordic country.

Making of Yule Goats, straw goat figures are an ancient Christmas tradition in Nordic countries, dating back probably even to pre-Christian times and pagan celebrations of winter solstice. In 1966 an advertising consultant, Stig Gavlén, came up with the idea of making a giant version a Yule Goat and placing it in the town square. Ironically the “chief engineer” on this project was his brother Jesper Gavlén, also the towns fire department chief.

At the stroke of midnight on New Year’s Eve, the goat went up in flames. Thus the tragic history of Gavle Goat began.

In following years the goat has been burned a total of 26 times, in a few instances in mere hours after being assembled, sometimes even before being actually being built. In addition to that, it has been smashed to pieces several times, and once even run over by a car.

Vandalizing of the Yule goat has become something of a dark tradition for the town. The organizers went through a long list of measures to try to protect the goat, or at least ensure its survival until Christmas. The list over the years includes protection by police, firemen, hired guards, bands of volunteers, webcams and fireproofing the material with chemicals. The price tag of goat construction went up ten fold in years between 1996 and 2005, reaching 100,000 Swedish kronor. The 2005 attack sparked the biggest wave of inanimate-goat violence in Sweden so far, with half a dozen copycat goat-burnings all over the Sweden.

Nowadays people can even place bets on the goat’s survival with certain Swedish and British bookmakers.

Since 1986, two goats are built, one by a society of Southern Merchants and the other one by Natural Science Club of Vasa School. This split is a result of the goats’ complicated history, though both goats suffer the same inevitable fate.

In 2009, the Southern Merchants version survived an arson attempt on December 7. It was finally stolen on December 14. Someone tried to throw the Natural Science Club goat into the river on December 11. On December 23 this goat was torched after a coordinated DDoS attack on the two websites hosting live video webcam feeds.